Welcome to BrightMind Writers

College Admissions & Essay Consulting for Bright Minds

Serving rising athletes, neurodivergent, neurotypical, and twice-exceptional (2E) students throughout the US

About Me

Writing makes stories come alive. Well-placed and thoughtfully chosen words bring ideas to life that dance on paper. 

AGNES SCOTT COLLEGE
Bachelor of Arts in American History, magna cum laude

GEORGIA STATE UNIVERSITY
Master of Arts in American Politics
Master’s thesis defended with distinction
Academic areas of focus include American politics and political theory

GEORGIA STATE UNIVERSITY
Doctoral Candidate in Political Science
All coursework, field, oral, and written comprehensive exams successfully completed and defended. Academic areas of focus include American politics, political theory, religion & politics, and the US Presidency

I have spent 26 years writing in some form or fashion and 18 years working with high school students. I have taught large lecture and seminar-style classes at Georgia State University, small writing groups of high school students, and even held brainstorming sessions with athletic teams. Whether it’s been working with them 1:1 on admissions essays or guiding them through the college application process, teaching AP Government study sessions to groups of students, ghostwriting and writing my own book, proofing manuscripts, and working for Google Project Gemini in its earliest beginnings, I always have words swirling in my mind. 

Writing isn’t what I do, it’s who I am. 

 

To professionally help students and their families as they navigate the intracicies of applying to college. The landscape is ever-changing and looks nothing like it did 3 years ago.

Some want very targeted and limited consult, and others want an all-encompassing relationship. Whether it’s just help identifying a topic or mentoring throughout the whole process, I am here as your advocate, knowledge source, stress reducer, and personalized concierge throughout the college application process.

Writing is my life’s purpose and my goal is to teach others how to thoughtfully and deliberately transfer their thoughts to paper. 

I am here to support your student in their journey, regardless of what they believe or write about. I am a mandatory reporter and keep very open lines of communication with my students and their parents. Students are free to ask me whatever questions they like because I believe in open, honest, intellectual conversations.

The most fruitful relationships are based upon trust. A student’s belief system (religious, political, social, or any other divisive topic) only matters to the extent they want it to and they want to share it. To me, all students are starting life, forming their own distinct opinions and making unique life choices. I am a judgement free zone and I honestly have the best job because of it because I get to work with some very cool young people.

Some want to ask and write about lightening rod topics and they make that clear immediately by their questions and the topics to which they gravitate. Other’s are perfectly fine talking about the pitfalls of using the color blue on plastic recycling bins. I’ve worked with students on papers about Nike Jordans, scrambled eggs, 3M duct tape, being outed by their iPhone, their fear of traveling internationally, and disdain for a step parent. So many more fascinating topics, all student driven and created. 

This journey, these words…are theirs. I’m merely here to help them get it out, make sense of it, and formulate a solid paper. Whatever their topic and word choices, I want them to dance on paper so they stand out in a sea of other applicants.

I love the idea that anyone can advance their education and chase their dream.  I hate that everyone believes they must conform to an ideal to achieve their dream. 

Both of my children are neurodivergent; one is an athlete and the other a vocalist. I have worked with neurotypical students, and they represent about 50% of my client base. The rest have either ADHD, ASD, anxiety, panic disorder, generalized and major depressive disorder, eating disorders, dyslexia, dysgraphia, phonological disorder, expressive receptive language disorder, and more. 

Some clients have had perfect ACT/SAT scores but about 33% go test optional because they do not like how they’ve scored. Some cannot test well regardless of how hard they study. I have worked with kids that have explosive intellects and have never seen a B in their life. Likewise, I have a ton of C students, too. Some of my students never have to study, and others have to live with their books and notes. 

Athletes and those with significant extracurriculars are a breed entirely their own. The added demands on their time and bodies mean these students have a whole host of unique considerations when applying to college.

My office is in Atlanta, GA, and I work with students attending public and private schools throughout the country. Roughy 55% of my clients are in state. They are evenly divided between public, private, and homeschooled. City of Atlanta, Fulton, Dekalb, Cobb, Cherokee, Forsyth, or Gwinnett County Schools are the most common publics. 

The predominance of local private school students attend Marist, St. Piux X, Holy Innocents, Westminster, Greater Atlanta Christian, Wesleyan, Woodward Academy, the Lovett School, the Paideia School, and Pace Academy.  There are scores of out of state private schools represented, including elite boarding and athletic academies. 

I love heirloom, homegrown tomatoes. I have two kids, two doodle dogs, and two cats. Bugs freak me out, especially Palmetto bugs. Mayonnaise is wrong and bad, and there is never a good reason to eat it. 

My favorite books are The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald, The Glass Castle by Jeannette Walls, and Ella Minnow Pea by Mark Dunn. A Farewell to Arms by Earnest Hemingway is the only book to bring tears to my eyes.

My earliest memories of  childhood are like faded and hazy advertisements from a late 1970’s Good Housekeeping magazine.  Our kitchen was a collision of avocado green and harvest gold.  Deliberately together, in one place.  My mind’s eye burns when I envision the color palate that ensconsed my youth. It was the early 80s.  Sitting at the kitchen table, I remember reading the dictionary out loud to my mother while she cooked.  The pronunciations of consonant-laden words often snagged my tongue, but I eventually mastered all of them.  My mother made dinner and sipped wine from a burgundy, Avon Cape Cod goblet.  She was nothing if not meticulous; always a perfect 4 oz. pour. No more and no less.  

Time would pass and I won spelling bees.  As a kid, I simply could not get enough words, writing, and reading.  I don’t actually derive much pleasure remembering my history itself; rather, what makes me the happiest are the words used to transport my readers to a time and place long ago.  A well-told story should send the 5 senses into overdrive.  I can still smell Hungarian Goulash on the stove as words like specificity and wamble passed my lips.  Eventually I realized that words make stories feel real, but great and well-placed words make an imagination dance on paper.  My life changed.  I moved to Georgia, met a guy, and got married.  

I started college after marriage, but I was still painfully young.  My first experience in school was lackluster at best.  I won’t divulge the name of the first university I attended in Georgia.  Suffice it to say that it was not a fit.  At all.  But that’s neither my fault, nor the school’s.  We simply didn’t match in the ways we needed to.   I didn’t expect much.  Nobody told me that I could or should; befallen on me was any notion of, “fit.”     

When I finally found my academic home, my brain exploded.  I went from consuming brainy melba toast to cerebral fine dining.  Agnes Scott College became my first intellectual obsession.  The Gothic and Victorian-themed architecture, southern magnolias, and dogwoods served as the backdrop to my learning.  The professors at my alma mater were rigorous, exacting, and tore my writing apart, in what originally seemed like sport.  But, I soon came to see the ink from their green Bic pens as intellectual love notes, handwritten just for me.  They remain some of the smartest women I’d ever meet and they hail from the halls of the finest institutions, too.  My brain was molded by human extensions of the Ivy Leagues and the best research institutions in the world; it remains equal parts honor and privilege to have been their pupil.  

Contrary to popular belief, a solid liberal arts education does not indoctrinate students into any normative belief systems, it informs thought processes.  My professoriate collectively tore apart my logic and reasoning, introduced me to concepts like relativism, and shaped my intellect.  I was never taught what to think, I was taught how to think and buttress my personal views with sound reason and analysis.  Incidentally, embracing the scientific method also means changing your views when they are proven wrong. It was intoxicating. I graduated magna cum laude with a degree in United States History.   The B+ on my transcript, which held me back from the summa cum laude distinction,  is a badge of honor.  Affectionately called B Plus Gus, my con law professor was the hardest I’d ever experience in a classroom, including my PhD coursework.  Nobody made it out of his class with an A and exceedingly few with a B+.    

I took a year off after graduation and worked in corporate America.  That was a bust.  Walking suits don’t like words unless they are short, lacking depth, and easily spell-checked by Microsoft.  I also cannot stand business lingo.  Concepts like throughput and circle-back are too sterile, leaving nothing to the imagination. I wanted to pick brains and open a thesaurus and play with words all day.    

So, I quit and decided it was all or nothing.  With the support of my husband, off I went for my master’s degree in political science.   And I couldn’t stop.  I finished my MA program and went on for my PhD.  As a graduate student, I taught my first class in American Government at Georgia State University and discovered that college freshmen are captivating people. Picking their brains is a fascinating and whimsical journey.  Sometimes frustrating, but enjoyable nonetheless.  Young minds can be quite erudite, buy only if you listen long enough.

I passed my written and oral comprehensive exams, began writing my dissertation, and then welcomed babies. Two, in quick succession. While my dissertation remains incomplete, my journey is hardly over.  It would be a student from my very first collegiate teaching experience that asked for help with an essay, putting me on this path as a writer…all those years ago.  I was  hooked.  And here we are…

"People will forget what you said, people will forget what you did, but people will never forget how you made them feel"

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